Jump to content

Please sign and share the petition 'Tighten regulation on taking, making and faking explicit images' at Change.org initiated by Helen Mort to the w:Law Commission (England and Wales) to properly update UK laws against synthetic filth. Only name and email required to support, no nationality requirement. See Current and possible laws and their application @ #SSF! wiki for more info on the struggle for laws to protect humans.

Wiki.study content has been moved to Wiki.study at Consumerium.org development wiki. The wiki.study domain will expired on 2020-09-11.

Economics: Difference between revisions

590 bytes added ,  29 August 2013
→‎Week 35 - Trade overview: sourced definition of w:Monetarism from the Wikipedia
(→‎Week 35 - Trade overview: sourced definition of w:Monetarism from the Wikipedia)
Line 140: Line 140:


* '''[[w:Business cycle|Business cycle]]s''' (or economic cycles) refer to economy-wide fluctuations in production, trade and economic activity in general over several months or years in an economy organized on free-enterprise principles. ( Wikipedia )
* '''[[w:Business cycle|Business cycle]]s''' (or economic cycles) refer to economy-wide fluctuations in production, trade and economic activity in general over several months or years in an economy organized on free-enterprise principles. ( Wikipedia )
* '''[[w:Keynesian economics|Keynesian economics]]''' (keɪnziən) or '''Keynesianism''' is the view that in the [[w:short run|short run]], especially during [[w:recessions|recessions]], [[w:Output (economics)|economic output]] is strongly influenced by [[w:aggregate demand|aggregate demand]] (total spending in the economy).  
 
* '''[[w:Monetarism]]'''
* '''[[w:Keynesian economics|Keynesian economics]]''' (keɪnziən) or '''Keynesianism''' is the view that in the [[w:short run|short run]], especially during [[w:recessions|recessions]], [[w:Output (economics)|economic output]] is strongly influenced by [[w:aggregate demand|aggregate demand]] (total spending in the economy). ( Wikipedia )
 
* '''[[w:Monetarism|Monetarism]]''' is a school of economic thought that emphasizes the role of governments in controlling the amount of money in circulation. It is the view within [[w:monetary economics|monetary economics]] that variation in the [[w:money supply|money supply]] has major influences on [[w:measures of national income and output|national output]] in the short run and the [[w:price level|price level]] over longer periods and that objectives of [[w:monetary policy|monetary policy]] are best met by targeting the growth rate of the [[w:money supply|money supply]]. ( Wikipedia )
 
* '''[[w:Exchange rate policy]]'''
* '''[[w:Exchange rate policy]]'''
* '''[[w:Taylor rule]]'''
* '''[[w:Taylor rule]]'''
* '''[[w:]]'''
* '''[[w:]]'''


We use only those cookies necessary for the functioning of the website.